Mickoleski v. Becker

31 N.W.2d 508, 252 Wis. 307, 1948 Wisc. LEXIS 271
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 31 N.W.2d 508 (Mickoleski v. Becker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mickoleski v. Becker, 31 N.W.2d 508, 252 Wis. 307, 1948 Wisc. LEXIS 271 (Wis. 1948).

Opinion

Fritz, J.

The alleged newly discovered evidence; upon which defendant bases his motion for a new trial, would be material in the event of such trial on solely the issue as to whether plaintiff was so badly injured and disabled as the result of being assaulted and beaten by defendant on June 4, 1946, that he cannot run or even walk without a cane. On the first trial in June, 1947, plaintiff testified (briefly summarized) that as the result of the assault he was all banged up and *309 stiff and sore; that every time he.twists his neck and shoulders it feels like sharp needles going through there all the way down his back, and later it got into his right leg, and his right knee is swollen, and the pains run down througlrthe lower part of his .right leg as though all h-is cords are tightened up in his body ; that he has not been able to work at all since he left the Wisconsin General Hospital on October 5, 1946, and does not feel any better now, and is all sore in his neck and his back,* and every time he turns his neck it catches him in the back, and there is a sharp pain like broken bones; that he cannot walk without a cane; that the cane he has is not the only cane he used since the accident; that just before he began using this present cane he did not run down the highway when he left the White Horse tavern, where he had an altercation and his cane was taken away from him, and he hobbled and dragged himself along the highway about four hundred feet, but was not running; and that he did not do any trapping or hunting that fall, but just went down with a friend, Frank Martino, and took him around with the car and dropped him off and picked him up there. And on behalf of plaintiff Dr. Harold N. Lubing testified on the trial that he specialized in neuropsychiatry and had treated plaintiff at the Wisconsin General Hospital from September 20th to October 5,1946; that as a result of defendant’s assault and beating of plaintiff there was an emotional injury which caused his reaction and complaint of pain in his back, neck, and arm, and various parts of his body, and there was no physical reason for this pain, but he does feel the pain; that it is real to him, and he has as much suffering as though there were an actual physical injury, and he suffers from a post-traumatic psychoneurosis which arises from some injury to the emotions or the person’s inner self.

In addition to other evidence introduced at the trial on behalf of defendant in relation to'the nature and extent of plaintiff’s injury following the assault, there was testimony by three *310 witnesses, including Harry Strojny, the keeper of the White Horse tavern, to the effect that on May 8, 1947, plaintiff walked into the tavern with a cane for help, and he was limping ; that after an altercation he ran out of the tavern through the back door without his cane” which was left broken on the floor; that Leo Stroik was chasing him and plaintiff was running as fast as he could down the highway without his cane and without limping, and Stroik was unable to catch him after trying to do so while chasing him about a city block; that Stroik followed him Into a filling station and thought plaintiff went over the top of a counter.

In support of defendant’s motion for a new trial he relied on seven affidavits, in some of which there were statements to the effect that in November, 1946, they saw plaintiff hunting deer, and walk and run in the woods without limping or using or needing the support of a cane, and that he had helped drag and and hang up a deer; and was apparently in good physical condition ; and in some of the affidavits the affiants stated they saw plaintiff on other occasions walking and dancing in a normal manner without a cane, and also casting while fishing.; And in relation to those sworn statements as to newly discovered evidence, defendant stated in his own affidavit (in connection with other matters hereinafter mentioned) that such evidence, purporting to prove plaintiff was not physically injured as a result of the accident; was discovered by defendant since the trial.

In opposing defendant’s motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence, there were submitted on behalf of plaintiff thirteen counteraffidavits in which the matters stated in the affidavits submitted by defendant were contradicted in substantially all material respects by the affiants’ statements that at the times and occasions mentioned in the affidavits submitted by the defendant the plaintiff did not run or walk without the use and help of his cane, and that on the *311 hunting trip in question he did not help drag or hang up .a deer and did not run or walk into .the woods with the other persons, but that he sat down most of the time and watched the huñting, and at no time walked in the woods more than about one hundred fifty feet.

The trial court, as well as the attorneys for each of the parties, rightly considered applicable herein the rule that,—

“A new trial will not be granted on the ground of newly discovered evidence'unless the party moving therefor satisfies the court, first, that such evidence came to his knowledge after the trial,; second, that he was not negligent in seeking to discover it; third, that it is material to the issue; fourth, that it is not merely cumulative to testimony introduced on the trial; and fifth, that it is reasonably probable that la different result would be Reached upon another trial.” Miller Saw-Trimmer Co. v. Cheshire, 177 Wis. 354, 369, 189 N. W. 465.

In the case at bar defendant’s alleged newly discovered evidence is merely cumulative to evidence which he introduced on the trial in so far as it is in relation to what he claims occurred at the White Horse tavern when plaintiff’s cane was broken and he ran away without the help of a.cane. But some of said evidence may not be cumulative’.-in :so far as there are statements in some of the affidavits on which defendant relies to the effect that in November, 1946,'some of the affiants saw plaintiff accompany some men who were hunting deer, and saw him walk and run in the woods without limping or using a cane, and that he helped drag and hang bp a deer, and was apparently in good physical condition ; and that on some other occasion, affiants saw plaintiff walking arid dancing without using a cane, and also saw him casting in a normal manner while fishing. - ■' • "

However, in neither his own nor any affidavit submitted on defendant’s behalf is there any statement of facts which can be considered sufficient to establish that he did exercise due dili *312 gence in order to discover, or was not negligent in failing to discover, the new evidence in time for his use thereof on the trial in June, 1947. As this court has stated,— ■*

“Applications of this nature are regarded with suspicion and disfavor. ‘The presumption _i$ that, by proper effort, the party might have discovered the evidence and used it on the trial, and that his not having done so is owing either to intentional omission, or unpardonable neglect. To rebut this presumption he must make out a case free from delinquency. His excuse must be so broad as to dissipate all surmises to the contrary. He must show that he was on the alert, but that, notwithstanding, the evidence eluded him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.W.2d 508, 252 Wis. 307, 1948 Wisc. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mickoleski-v-becker-wis-1948.